Shahid Mukhtar, Ph.D., assistant professor of Biology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s College of Arts and Sciences, has been selected to receive a three-year $800,000 grantfor his research from the National Science Foundation.
The grant, Symbiosis, Defense and Self-Recognition Cluster, is awarded to scientists to support research on how plants, microbes, fungi and viruses recognize each other and identify pathogens.
Mukhtar’s study targets the understanding on how pathogens change a plant’s cellular metabolism to acquire nutrients they need for growth. Using techniques from both biology and computer sciences, his focal point will be to construct a map of transcription that leads to protein synthesis and elucidate how pathogens alter the flow of biological information.
Mukhtar hopes this research will help scientists gain more knowledge about how pathogens can affect disease in plants.
With this research, students at UAB will gain experience in bioinformatics, a field that develops software to understand biological data. Efforts from this research will expose urban school teachers in Mukhtar’s BioTeach program to genetic innovations and seek to engage students from nearby historically black colleges and universities.
The National Science Foundation is an independent agency that promotes the progress of science and national health. The NSF is the funding source for 24 percent of all federally supported research conducted by America’s colleges and universities.
UAB professor receives $800,000 grant for plant research
Faculty Excellence
CAS News
November 21, 2016
More News
-
Kiper receives 2026 Michel de Montaigne Endowed PrizeThe recipient of the 2026 Michel de Montaigne Endowed Prize in the History of Ideas is Jordan Kiper, Ph.D., assistant professor in the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s Department Anthropology. -
Is AI competent to make moral judgments? A UAB philosopher helped devise tests to find out.Recent studies have some researchers touting AI’s ethical reasoning prowess. In a Nature paper, UAB’s Joshua May, Ph.D., joined scientists from Google DeepMind to explain how to get proof. -
UAB lands 17 graduate programs in top 20 rankingsUAB earns multiple top rankings in the 2026 U.S. News Best Graduate Schools, highlighting national excellence across health, nursing, business and engineering programs.